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This one was forged in the fires of hell
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Despite restocking frequently
All six Terra Meteorite variants retail for $2,950 each with five designs limited to 650 units
The rarest variant, the Verdant, is capped at just 50 units worldwide
No established secondary market exists yet, making this a speculative flip with real upside potential
There’s a watch on the market right now with a face made from a 4-billion-year-old meteorite, a case that incorporates material from Apollo 11’s command module, and a flight history that includes a trip to the edge of space. The timing of Diatom’s Terra Meteorite collection launch also lines up almost perfectly with the buildup to the Artemis II mission, and the current cultural wave of space enthusiasm that comes with it. Whether this is a buy for the collection or a calculated reseller play, it’s genuinely one of the more interesting watch drops of the year.
Diatom Watches is a UK-based independent watchmaker with a niche focus: every watch they produce incorporates real extraterrestrial and space-flown materials. The Terra collection takes that concept as far as it can go. Each dial is cut from genuine Gibeon meteorite, a nickel-iron meteorite that fell in Namibia roughly 4 billion years ago. The material is ancient enough that it predates Earth’s formation, and the distinctive Widmanstätten crystal pattern that emerges when it’s sliced and etched is entirely unique to each dial. No two are exactly alike.
The case material goes one step further. A portion of it is sourced from the Apollo 11 command module, Columbia, the spacecraft that carried Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins to the Moon in 1969. Beyond that, every Terra watch has been physically flown to the edge of space before being sold, giving each one a verifiable flight history.
Six colorway variants are available: Graphite, Azure, Verdant (green), Dune, Arctic, and Lagoon. Five of the six are limited to 650 units. The Verdant is the real scarcity play at just 50 units total.
The materials here are legitimately compelling for a certain type of collector. Space memorabilia has a long track record of commanding serious premiums at auction, and this collection offers something rare in the watch world: physical provenance connecting the piece to the Apollo program. For collectors who are into watches, space history, or both, this hits a specific itch that almost nothing else on the market can scratch.
The timing also helps. Artemis II, NASA’s first crewed mission around the Moon since Apollo 17, is building real mainstream buzz. That kind of cultural moment historically lifts interest in space-adjacent collectibles, and Diatom is releasing this collection right into that window.
The Verdant’s 50-unit limit in particular is the kind of scarcity that tends to matter on the secondary market. Limited colorways in watch collecting almost always carry a premium over standard variants, and 50 units is extremely tight.
There are real reasons to be cautious here, and they deserve equal time.
The movement is quartz. For collectors spending nearly $3,000 on a watch, that’s a significant sticking point. The watch community generally views mechanical movements as table stakes at this price point, and the premium market has conditioned buyers to expect them. Quartz movement at $2,950 will generate pushback from enthusiasts, which could suppress secondary demand among the most active collector base.
The case design itself is fairly understated. The materials are extraordinary, but the overall form factor doesn’t bring much visual drama beyond the dial. No complications, no moonphase, no date, no multi-register layout. Buyers are paying almost entirely for the provenance story, which is a fine reason to buy a watch but a more uncertain foundation for resale.
The biggest risk is simple: Diatom doesn’t have an established secondary market. There are no sold eBay comps, no Chrono24 history to reference. You’re projecting demand that hasn’t existed yet, which makes this speculative by definition. It may very well develop, especially given the space timing and the Apollo connection. But it isn’t confirmed.
Diatom offers 30-day returns after delivery, which provides some protection. However, their policy specifically notes that customs fees, tariffs, and duties are not refunded on returns. Shipping to US, UK, and EU customers is listed as free with duties included at checkout, but it’s not entirely clear whether returning a watch would retroactively expose buyers to tariff charges. That ambiguity is worth taking seriously before committing.
If you’re buying to flip and the secondary market doesn’t develop the way you’re hoping, the return window is your backup, but that tariff question needs to be resolved before you count on it. Contact Diatom directly to confirm the full return cost before purchasing.
Bottom line: this is a speculative flip. The story is genuinely cool, the Verdant’s production numbers are tight enough to matter, and the Artemis timing is almost suspiciously good. But there’s no comp data, the movement will put some collectors off, and the return policy has an unresolved variable. If you’re a watch collector who would be happy holding this regardless of the secondary market outcome, the buy case is easier to make. If you’re a pure reseller, go in with eyes open.
Music & Movies
This one was forged in the fires of hell
Video Games
Despite restocking frequently